Page 62 - Life of Gertrude Bell
P. 62

5°                    GERTRUDE BELL
                      deep curtseys and kissed the Empress’s hand, and then we all sat
                      down, Florence next to the Emperor and I next to the Emp  ress ...
                      The Emperor talked nearly all the time; he tells us that no plays
                      of Shakespeare were ever acted in London and that we must have
                      heard tell that it was only the Germans who had really studied or
                      really understood Shakespeare. One couldn’t contradict an
                      Emperor, so we said we had always been told so ... ’ It was a
                      moment of unusual reticence on Gertrude’s part.
                        There were the inescapable Court balls and gargantuan meals,
                      and Gertrude cycled round the Embassy in the rain to keep her­
                      self in trim. They had dinner before their departure with Cecil
                      Spring-Rice of the Foreign Office, later to become her cousin
                      Florence’s husband, and with Lord Granville. As they departed
                      from their last meeting with their royal hosts, the Emperor and
                      Uncle Frank sat and examined a sheaf of telegrams that had been
                      handed to the former. The girls pretended not to listen, but they
                      heard references to Crete ... Bulgaria ... Serbia ... mobilisation,
                      and so forth. The Empress kept looking at Wilhelm anxiously —
                      ‘she is terribly perturbed about it all and no wonder for he is
                      persuaded that we are all on the brink of war ... ’
                        Yet another cloud came to darken a life of such material com­
                      fort and ease. In April, soon after Gertrude’s return from Germany,
                      Lady Mary Lascelles died after a brief illness. Her aunt had seemed
                      in good health when they were together and the news came as a
                      great shock.
                        At the end of 1897 came the first of two round-the-world
                      voyages Gertrude was to make in that well-worn and often         9
                      tedious tradition of the rich in Victorian times. But journeys were
                      seldom tiresome or without incident for her. This time she
                      enjoyed the company of her brother Maurice, of whom she had
                      seen little in recent years, chiefly because he was content to spend
                      most of his time in the North working among the steelmen. He
                      was said to be a young man of great charm and unpretentiousness
                      who moved easily among the workers at the Bell factories and
                     who knew literally hundreds of them and their families person­    i .
                     ally. They travelled on the Royal Mail Steamship City of Rio de
                     Janeiro. On December 29th she wrote to her father: ‘We are safely
                     aboard with all our belongings and we have magnificent state
                     rooms to ourselves ... so you see it’s quite perfect... We are both
                     much excited ... and amused. It’s awfully interesting watching
                     the people who come aboard. Some look rather nice I think, but







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